6 February 2017 |5 comments

I know this isn’t the most Summery of recipes, but I have been in need of some seriously grounding nourishment of late. Both my partner and I have been working so hard recently, and truthfully I do worry that we are burning up our stores of jing – or essence/life force – as they say in Chinese Medicine. Ideally a work-life balance should be maintained in order to keep your mind and body well.

However, there are times that simply call more of you to forefronts – and that’s perfectly ok. I think the trick, is to acknowledge these periods of time when they arrive, and hold the intention that this is just a temporary phase, with order and restoration to follow. What I’m trying to say is, sometimes it is totally appropriate and needed, to hustle!

Anyway, we’re in said phase at the moment. It’s not a natural place for me to be operating from, so I’m drawing on food as medicine to nourish the body as best I possibly can. When your energy is very outward like this, I find raw foods and salads don’t quite cut the mustard. You need to counter balance with earthy, rich and grounding foods. And so, this soup is the perfect answer.

Lemon White Bean Kale Soup

This isn’t too dissimilar from the type of soups I grew up with, particularly the types my Nana used to make. Dried beans, soaked then cooked in a homemade broth, with plenty of olive oil and garlic (it’s a Croatian thing!), and home grown vegetables added just before serving.

White beans can refer to either the larger cannellini beans (which I have used), or the smaller navy beans. They are far more enjoyable dried and cooked vs canned. It’s no chore to soak them in advance, you simply need to have them on the stove a little longer.

Beans contain a good amount of oligosaccharides: types of carbohydrates/fibre that pass through the small bowel undigested, arriving at the colon where they provide food for the resident beneficial bacteria (Bifidobasteria and Lactobaccilli). In other words, they are a prebiotic (discussed in detail on my post on prebiotics here).

As a wee bit of a catch 22, when using dried beans, a significant amount of these oligosaccharides leach into the water. So, the pro’s of soaking beans include a reduced cooking time and less gastrointestinal gas (a by-product of beneficial bacteria feasting on these lovely oligosaccharides!), and the con’s of course are that you simply get less of that health-promoting prebiotic fibre! Decisions, decisions!

Anyway – I opted to soak this time – I felt I could do without the gas!

Other wonderful benefits imparted from the humble bean include energy and protein – just what I needed to replenish lost stores. They’re also a good source of the B vitamin folate, iron, and potassium.

The only unusual ingredient here is the kombu strip. Kombu is a type of hardy seaweed that is incredibly mineral rich. Often used in Macrobiotic cooking, it is added to dishes for a nutritional booster – then discarded after use. I just happen to be in a habit of adding it to my cooking but it is totally optional. If you want to experiment, look out for it at a natural foods store.

I hope you enjoy this nourishing pot of goodness – and if you are also in a temporary state of conscious hustle – please be gentle with yourself!

Add water and stock, dried beans, garlic, thyme, kombu and bay leaves. Cover, bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for about 40 minutes.

While the soup base cooks, wash kale, remove tough inner stalks, then slice into thin one inch ribbons – take your time with this, it is far nicer to have small delicate pieces.

After 30 minutes, add the potato, and leave to simmer for a further 10-15 minutes, at which point, both beans and potatoes should be soft. Fish out the bay leaves and kombu and discard. Now use a potato masher to carefully mash the beans/potatoes so about half of them are mashed and half whole (if beans/potatoes aren’t soft yet continue to cook a little longer).

Add kale, and cook for another 5-10 minutes. Note the water content – you may be just right, you may need to top up, or even cook uncovered to reduce it down.

By now, your total cooking time should be about an hour and ten minutes.

Once kale has just softened, add another tablespoon of olive oil, and stir in the lemon juice and zest. Serve with crusty bread and perhaps a sprinkle of nut parmesan!

Recipe Notes

• You can make this with pre-cooked, canned beans – one 400g tin should do the trick – just rinse and drain before cooking, and use much less water/stock (perhaps 4 cups total liquid). Your cooking time will drastically reduce also.• If you have a large enough pot – this is a great recipe to double then freeze.• Try adding a finely sliced fennel bulb to the pot as your fry the onion – yum.• Try using diced parsnip or swede in place of potato if you need to adapt this to be nightshade free.• I know it sounds a lot, but trust me – 8 cloves of garlic is just fine!

I’d love you to follow me on Instagram, tag me @ascensionkitchen so I can see your creations!

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lauren Glucina is a plant-based whole foods Nutritionist, Naturopath and Medical Herbalist. She is a passionate advocate for food as medicine. Lauren has also formally trained as a Raw Foods Chef and has a soft spot for raw treats.

Lauren is available for Natural & Nutritional Medicine consultations here.

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Jane Nagahama

I have a bag of baby kale (from Costco) in the freezer as kale is very hard to find in Japan – do you think I could use that? If not, what would be good as a substitution? TIA Jane

Hi Jane – that sounds perfect – any variety of kale will do – I just prefer the flat leaf over curly purely for texture. Spinach or Swiss chard/silverbeet would also be great. Enjoy 🙂

Tirza Sevilla

I made this using dried beans I had soaked for over 24 hours. After cooking on stove top for over 90 minutes, beans were still very hard. It was getting late, so I decided to put in pressure cooker. I took out Kombu and pressure cooked everything remaining for 25 minutes, beans were still not super soft and after pressure cooking the soup was inedible and bitter. Not sure where I went wrong, but my understanding is that you have to cook dried beans a lot longer than 45 minutes.

Morning Tirza. I wonder if the beans you used were a bit old maybe? Particularly if they were still hard and bitter after all of that soaking and cooking time. There is always the option of using canned beans if you need to speed the process up. Lauren 🙂

Tirza Sevilla

Yeah, I read from other bloggers questioning integrity of beans. I had just bought them, but there is no telling how old they actually were. Will be trying this recipe again!